Product Description

Note: While the future printings of Carcassonne will no longer contain the River expansion, these copies still do.

The southern French city of Carcassonne was founded on an
important trade route between the Mediterranean and the Atlantic. Because of its strategic location, the city was often conquered and has known many rulers. As a result of this varied history, the city is famous for its unique mixture of Roman and
Medieval fortifications.

The players develop the area around Carcassonne by placing land tiles. Each turn the area becomes larger as the players expand and add roads, fields, cities, and cloisters. The players may also deploy their followers as thieves, farmers, knights, and monks to control and score points for the roads, farms, cities, and cloisters. As the players have only a few followers, the wise player will plan his moves carefully and deploy followers when and where he can earn the most points.

If there is any game that will attract new players, Carcassonne is certainly it. Even if one ignores the multiple fascinating expansions, the basic game takes tile laying and makes it an art. Players feel as if they are actually building a large puzzle - with scattered cities and monasteries amongst a network of roads and fields. Placing "meeples," miniature people to claim these cities and farms, players must tactically attempt to control the biggest cities and longest roads. It plays well in multiplayer mode (up to five) but also makes a tremendous two-player game. It's simple, easy, and fun -- and most new players will ask to play it again immediately!

In his series The Dice Tower Audio Reviews, noted reviewer Tom Vasel provides short audio (mp3) reviews of both new and old games. Tom knows games, and these audio reviews are a great way to find out more!

Product Reviews

I bought this game for my kids for Christmas last year (ages 11
and 13) and it soon became the family's favorite game. We play
it all of the time. I actually bought the big box which contains 5
expansion sets. I was taking a chance by spending so much on
a game I never hear of plus the expansion packs. What if we
didn't like it? Well, not to worry, we loved it the first time we
played. We have tried two expansions so far and they just make
the game that much more fun. This game if full of strategy, yet is
so easy to understand that it can also be played by a younger
crowd. We have shared this game with everyone who will play
and they become hooked too.

The best thing about this type of game is that it is different every
time you play. You build the playing board as you go and no two
games are the same.

We love this game and highly recommend it to anyone who likes to
play games.

Carcassonne is easily the most popular game in my closet. Simple
rules. An ever-changing game board, hence a game that is never
played the same twice, and a strategy that is always evolving. I
think the one thing that makes this game the most popular in my
group of players is that anyone, I have yet to have one that I
have introduced into this game not like it and want to play it
again, can pick this up learn the strategy and game mechanics in
the first go through, and easily desire to play again.

Very good game to relax after a long week and laugh with some
friends.

Carcassonne is a tile-laying eurogame, which was designed by
Klaus-Jurgen Wrede in 2001 and was awarded both the Spiel Des Jahres
and the Deutscher SpielePreis that year. Carcassonne is often touted
as one of the best “gateway” games (along with Settlers of Catan and
Ticket to Ride) for introducing non-gamers to the hobby of strategy
board games, and it’s true that the game can definitely be used as a
“gateway” game. However, this review is meant to explain how
Carcassonne can be played as a deep and heavy game along the lines of
Tigris & Euphrates and Caylus. If played under the following
conditions, Carcassonne can become a highly strategic and extremely
replayable game with no more luck than a game of Tigris.

First things first, what do you get in the box? For a retail price of
$24.95, you get the following components: 72 land tiles, 40 wooden
followers (a.k.a. “meeples”), 1 scoring track, and 1 instruction
booklet. The components are not spectacular, but they get the job done
very well and don’t leave anything to be desired. Although the scoring
track is not necessarily the best way to keep score because it can get
bumped during play and is not as reliable as paper and pencil. I’m
going to reference two expansions for Carcassonne below, so I will
mention their price and components here as well. First, Carcassonne: Inns & Cathedrals (a.k.a. I&C) retails for $14.95. I&C comes with 18
land tiles, 6 scoring tiles, 8 gray followers, and 6 large followers
(a.k.a. “gianteeples”). The new land tiles match the originals nicely,
the scoring tiles and gray followers are essentially useless, but the
gianteeples are crucial to the game as discussed below. Second,
Carcassonne: Traders & Builders (a.k.a. T&B) retails for $14.95 as
well. T&B comes with 24 land tiles, 20 trade goods, 6 builders, 6
pigs, 1 cloth bag. All of these components are up to par with the
original and are necessary additions to the game. Both of these
expansions are a bit pricey, but can be found at discount online
retailers. Both are integral to fully enjoying the game as I think it
should be played.

How do you basically play this game? Carcassonne is a tile-laying
eurogame, meaning that on each turn your basic action is to draw a
random tile from the pool and add it to the board, which starts off
with only one tile, but will be composed of 114 tiles by the end of
the game. When adding your tile to the board you will have many
choices as to where you want to place the tile and how you want to
rotate it, but there are some restrictions. In puzzle-like fashion,
you have to make sure that like sides match like sides. There are
three land features to consider when matching up the sides of the
tiles, which are farms, cities, and roads. This is an extremely
intuitive system that must people can pick up and understand very
quickly because it just feels natural to make sure that the green
farms, brown cities, and white roads match up consistently across
tiles. After adding your one tile to the board, you can either end
your turn right there, or you have the option of placing one of your
“meeples” on that tile. If you place a “meeple” on that tile then you
have to decide where on the tile he will go. You can turn your
“meeple” into farmers on the farms, knights on the cities, thieves on
the roads, or monks on the cloisters. Cloisters are the fourth
possibility for scoring points in addition to the first three, but are
not a feature to consider in making tiles match because they don’t
touch the edge of a tile. Play will continue in clockwise order with
everyone placing a one tile on their turn and having the option of
placing one “meeple” on that tile, until all 114 tiles have been
placed, at which point the game ends and final scores are tallied.

How do you score and win this game? You can score points throughout
the game as features are completed and you can score additional points
at the end of the game for uncompleted features as well as farms.
First, roads are the simplest because they give you 1 point per tile
and are completed when they have two end points. Roads also give you 1
point per tile at the end of the game even if they are not completed.
Second, cities give you 2 points per tile and are completed when they
are completely enclosed. However, cities only give you 1 point per
tile at the end of the game if they are not completed. Third,
cloisters give you 9 points and are completed when they are entirely
surrounded by other tiles on all sides (including diagonally).
Cloisters give you 1 point per adjacent tile (including diagonally)
plus 1 point for the cloister itself at the end of the game if they
are not completed. Finally, farms are the most complicated, but also
often the most important scoring feature. Farms give you 4 points per
completed city that they touch at the end of the game, but do not give
you any points during the game. There is also an alternate farm
scoring rule that has been designed since Carcassonne was originally
released, which involves giving 3 points per completed city, but I
will not get into that here because I don’t think it’s as good as the
original rules personally.

What does I&C add that’s so important? First, the 18 new land tiles
add more possibilities, options, and variety to the base game with new
configurations of farms, cities, and roads on them. In addition, these
new land tiles add two new features, which are the inns for roads and
the cathedrals for cities. Inns make roads worth double, and
cathedrals make cities worth three points per tile. However, roads
with inns and cities with cathedrals are worth zero at the end of the
game if they are not completed. So there is some additional reward but
obviously some risk as well. Knowing whether to place the tile with
the inn or cathedral on one of your own scoring features to increase
your score or whether it's late enough in the game to place the inn or
cathedral on an opponent's scoring feature to make it worth nothing in
the end is obviously very important, and takes practice to fully
appreciate and understand. Second, the large followers (a.k.a.
“gianteeples”) are crucial for making the game more strategic. They
function like normal meeples except that they count as two meeples for
purposes of controlling a scoring feature. While the rules do not
permit you to place a meeple on a city, road, or farm that is already
claimed, the rules do allow you to place a meeple on a separate city,
road, or farm and later join that feature to another feature for
purposes of sharing one larger feature. However, if you manage to
either join up two meeples then you will take all of the points
because you have more meeples on the scoring feature than anyone else.
The “gianteeple” is extremely important because it allows you to join
up a single nearby city, road, or farm to take control of a valuable
scoring feature from your opponent.

What does T&B add that’s so important? First, the 24 new land tiles
add even more variety to the base game with even more configurations
of farms, cities, and roads on them. Second, the builders are as
crucial as the gianteeples for making the game more strategic. The
builders are units that you can add to an existing city or road that
you are working on, which allow you to immediately take a bonus turn
on any future turn that you add to that city or road. These bonus
turns really add up, and make clever placement and use of your builder
crucial for success in this game. Finally, the trade goods are an
important addition to the game because they give you an incentive to
complete an opponent’s city sometimes. There are three trade goods
(i.e., wine, grain, and cloth), which appear on various city tiles.
When you complete a city with tiles that show these goods then you get
a marker representing the goods on the tiles. However, you don’t need
to actually control and score the city, you just have to lay the last
tile that completes the city. At the end of the game, the person with
the most markers in each type of trade good receives 10 points. These
30 points awarded at the end of the game can often be decisive, and so
you need to constantly monitor the tally of trade goods that you and
your opponent have throughout the game.

Finally, these are my tips for making this game as strategic and deep
as possible:

1) Three’s a Crowd

Always play with just two players. The game claims to work with
anywhere from two to six players (when you add in the I&C expansion),
but the game really shines with just two players. With more players
there is too much going on between each of your turns, and your level
of control diminishes greatly. With only two players, the game becomes
zero-sum so that hurting your opponent is just as good as helping
yourself, whereas with more players it’s not worthwhile to hurt an
opponent’s position because this will simply result in the third
player gaining an advantage. The luck of the tile draw is reduced
significantly if you can use tiles that don’t help you to simply block
and opponent, but doing so is not as good a play when you have
multiple opponents. Moreover, with only 2 players you will be able to
place 57 tiles during the game, whereas with 3 players you will only
be able to place 38 tiles per game. This increased number of tiles
placed per game is significant not only because it increases the
importance of managing your supply of meeples so that you never have
too few in your supply but you never have too few on the board, but
also because it reduces the luck of the tile draw by increasing the
number of tiles drawn. I’m not statistics expert, but I’m pretty sure
that the larger the sample size, the more likely that your
distribution is not skewed, so in a two-player game you are less
likely to draw all of one type of tile for example.

2) Vanilla is just too Plain

Always play with both the I&C and T&B expansions. Not only are the
additional 42 tiles crucial for adding variety to the tile mix, but
also the two new unites (i.e., gianteeples and builders) add a
significant layer of strategy to the game. Using your gianteeple and
builder effectively is crucial to success. First, the gianteeple is
critical because it facilitates stealing cities, roads, and farms from
your opponent, so the game becomes much more about clever placement to
take over an opponent’s scoring feature or to block an opponent from
stealing your valuable scoring features. Moreover, if you can lock-up
your opponent’s gianteeple early in the game in a position that is
unlikely to allow your opponent to reclaim the gianteeple then you
will often win, so it is very important to prevent your gianteeple
from getting trapped on the board. Second, the builder is also
critical because maximizing your number of bonus turns is extremely
important to winning. It’s pretty clear that someone who takes twice
as many turns as their opponent will almost always win, so if you are
constantly adding to the scoring feature with your builder then you
will do very well, and if you can trap your opponent’s builder on the
board where he cannot add to the builder’s scoring feature then you
will also do very well. Deciding whether to place your builder on a
road or a city is very important, and deciding whether to complete the
feature with your builder on it to reclaim the unit and replace it
elsewhere is also a very interesting decision.

3) There’s no such thing as too Aggressive

The most important thing for making Carcassonne as deep and highly
strategic game is to play as aggressively as possible. This means that
you need to realize that stealing an opponent’s city, road, or farm is
often much better than simply starting your own. This means that you
need to always be conscious of how your opponent may try to steal your
own cities, roads, and farms, and you need to try to build these
scoring features so as to minimize his opportunities for sneaking onto
your features. You should constantly be thinking about how to get
meeples into your opponent’s cities, roads, and farms, especially once
the cities are a couple tiles big, the roads are a few tiles long, and
the farms are worth more than 12 or so points. In addition, if you
draw a tile that isn’t much use to you because you can’t add it to
anything you’re working on and you’re not in a position to start
something new, then you should absolutely find the best place to play
it to block your opponent. You should even think about block your
opponent even if the tile could be used to help yourself because in a
two-player game hurting your opponent is often as good or better than
helping yourself. This means that you should minimize the number of
tiles that would work for your opponent in a specific situation. If he
needs one tile to complete a city then trying to place tiles adjacent
to the space where he needs to place that final city tile. You should
dictate whether the edges of that final city tile must have roads or
farms on them so as to minimize his chances of completing the city.
This is even more important if the city has either his gianteeple or
builder in it. If you simply work on your own scoring features,
ignoring what your opponent is doing, not only will the game not be
very interesting or interactive, but you will lose consistently.

Germany's Game of the Year is an addictive adventure in which players lay colorful tiles depicting fragments of roads, cities, cloisters, and farms. Turns consist of picking a facedown tile, adding it to the expanding countryside, and optionally placing one of your pawns on the tile. You score immediately upon completing roads, cities, and cloisters where you have placed a pawn. The pawn then returns to your stock for redeployment. Pawns placed on farmland never return to your stock, but can yield lucrative scores at the end of the game--the larger the connected farmland, the greater the score. If you don't claim victory by having the most points when the last tile is laid, never mind; few other games let you enjoy such a gorgeous final canvas.

Stuart Dagger
(Counter Magazine)

November 30, 2000

Carcassonne is a free-form tile laying game, in the course of which the players create a landscape made of walled cities, monasteries, roads and fields. Each component of the landscape will belong to one of the players, who will score points for it. A scoring component will normally be spread across more than one tile and this will sometimes create tussles for possession. The player with the most points once all the tiles have been laid is the winner.

The tiles are square and each one shows between one and three features. Some typical ones are a monastery surrounded by a field, a section of walled city with a road leading to it and three road segments meeting at a junction, with the rest of the tile being field. On your turn you draw a tile and place it next to one of the tiles already on the table. It is your choice which, but you must place the tile so that like features match up. So, if you place a tile with a section of road/city/field next to another tile, then the feature must be matched on the tile it abuts--road segment joining up to road segment, city area to city area, and so on. Having placed the tile, you then have the option of placing one of your men on one of the features of the tile you have just laid. Put him in a city and he becomes a knight; in a monastery and he becomes a monk; on a road a thief; and in a field a farmer. Cities, roads and fields will, in the normal way of things, spread across more than one tile and there is a restriction on placement which says that you may not place a man on a feature that already contains another man. For example, were you to place a tile which extended a road and were there already a thief on another part of it, then you could not place your own man on the road and would either have to pass up the placement option or place him on one of the other features. You only have a limited number of men and so passing up a placement option isn't necessarily a disadvantage.

This restriction on placements means that there is not a lot of conflict for possession, but it can occur when parts of roads, cities or farms that began as disjoint fragments join up as the result of the placement of later tiles. When this happens, possession goes to the player with most men on the road--ties being resolved on an amicable, both/all players score the points basis.

Most city segments will show a piece of wall with an area of city on one side of it. Place a certain number of these together and you will create a complete walled city, at which point the owner of the city scores the points for it and all the knights in the city are returned to their owners ready to be re-used. Similarly with roads: the end of a road can be either a city, a monastery or a crossroads and as soon as a road has two legitimate ends to it, it is scored and the men on it reclaimed. With both roads and cities, the bigger/longer they are, the more they are worth. Monasteries are also scored during the game, though here the basis for "completion" is a bit different. Farms (collections of fields bounded by roads and city walls) don't score until the end. Uncompleted features also score points at the end, but not as well as they would have done had they been completed.

This is a simple and elegant set of rules which makes your general strategy clear, while still giving you plenty of tactical choices to make on where you place your tiles and where you put your men. Your aim is to build valuable cities, create long roads and 'complete' monasteries while not running out of the men that you need to take advantage of the placement options that the tiles you are laying are creating. As I said earlier, your stock of men is limited and you will need to keep up a steady "complete a feature, score and reclaim" production line if you are not to run out mid-game and see your score suffer as a consequence.

The simple "draw a tile and place it" mechanism means that the game has a luck element to it, in that there will be times when you may or may not succeed in drawing the tile that fits nicely with your plans. This would be reduced were you to allow each player to have a holding of 2 or 3 tiles and to operate on a "play and then draw so as to replenish your holding" basis, but doing this would inevitably lengthen the playing time and I don't think that the change is actually necessary. Much better to accept the game for what it is, an unpretentious and interesting, middleweight game that lasts exactly the right length of time for the amount of entertainment that it provides.

Marcia Baldanza

October 22, 2003

Carcassonne recreates the interesting landscapes of the southern French city, founded on an important trade route between the Mediterranean and the Atlantic. Each turn the area becomes larger as the players expand and add roads, fields, cities, and churches. The players may also place their followers as thieves, farmers, knights, and monks to control and score points for the roads, farms, cities, and churches. As the players have only a few followers, the wise player will plan his moves carefully. Carcassonne is a simple, clever tile laying game that brings new challenges with every turn. For ages 8+.

Other Resources for Carcassonne:

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